Uzbekistan has decided to join EEU says Russian official

Uzbekistan has decided to join EEU says Russian official
Mirziyoyev, left, with Russian President Vladimir Putin. / Kremlin.ru
By Kanat Shaku in Almaty October 3, 2019

Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev is looking to take his country into the Moscow-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), Russian Senate speaker Valentina Matviyenko said on October 2.

"The Uzbek president has made a decision and is currently working on Uzbekistan joining the EEU," Matviyenko said during a meeting with the head of the Uzbek lower chamber of parliament, Nuriddinjon Ismailov.

Mirziyoyev’s ongoing reform drive to achieve a modern market economy includes the gradual removal of Uzbekistan’s protectionist trade policies. His administration has also expressed an interest in joining the World Trade Organisation (WTO). The official negotiation process for Uzbekistan’s WTO accession began in July. Deputy director general of the WTO, Alan Wolfe, said in February that Uzbekistan may join the WTO within two years.

Uzbekistan has never previously expressed any explicit interest in joining the EEU. 

"Local proponents of joining the EEU and the CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organisation, an intergovernmental military alliance of Russia and other post-Soviet states] claim that Uzbekistan’s membership in these organizations would institutionalize the current favorable trade regime as well as close economic and military cooperation with Russia, thus stabilizing bilateral relations," Jamestown Foundation wrote in 2017

"Moreover, it would help the 2 million–3 million Uzbekistani migrant workers in Russia who continue to face hardships there, despite various recently signed bilateral agreements meant to ease their access to the Russian labor market,” the foundation added.

It also noted: “The Uzbekistani guest workers’ difficult situation would probably be further eased thanks to their native country’s EEU membership. Incoming migrant laborers from EEU member states are exempted from Russian-language and Russian-history exams, enjoy access to free medical services, have their university degrees recognized and, most importantly, are not required to purchase costly work permits."

Under Mirziyoyev’s predecessor Islam Karimov, who died while still in office in late 2016, international agreements such as the EEU were seen as political alliances undermining Uzbekistan’s political neutrality and, potentially, its sovereignty.

Many individuals and groups in Central Asian nations view the EEU primarily as Russia’s political tool rather than simply as an economic alliance because the trade bloc does not necessarily offer economic benefits to the member countries. For example, Kyrgyzstan’s car re-export market and the Dordoi bazaar were both seemingly strangled by the new regulations that came with EEU membership, with the former fading out of existence. Prior to joining the EEU, Kyrgyzstan exported used cars from abroad and sold them to neighbouring nations—mainly Kazakhstan. 

In Uzbekistan’s case, joining the EEU may complicate some of its focus on attracting Western investors as it would become increasingly enmeshed in post-Soviet links to Russia.

The EEU commenced in 2015 on the basis of a customs union created in 2010. The original members are Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan. Armenia became a member of the free-trade bloc in January 2015, while Kyrgyzstan joined in August 2015. The trade bloc is set to launch a temporary preferential trade agreement with Iran in late October.

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